Category Archives: Documentary

On VOD: DO NOT RESIST

filkins-do-not-resist-1200New to VOD this week: DO NOT RESIST

Craig Atkinson’s look at the nationwide militarization of the police force had its world premiere at Tribeca this year, where it picked up the Best Documentary award. Screenings also included Hot Docs, Traverse City, AFI Docs, DOXA, Human Rights Watch, Telluride Mountainfilm, Bergen, Zurich, Dokufest, and Camden. The film now comes to iTunes.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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Sundance 2017: Additional Titles Announced

sundance 2017Several additional titles have just been announced for the 2017 Sundance Film Festival:

DOCUMENTARY PREMIERES:

BENDING THE ARC
Directors: Kief Davidson & Pedro Kos / USA
This powerful epic is about the extraordinary doctors and activists—including Paul Farmer, Jim Yong Kim, and Ophelia Dahl – whose work 30 years ago to save lives in a rural Haitian village grew into a global battle in the halls of power for the right to health for all. World Premiere

LONG STRANGE TRIP
Director: Amir Bar-Lev / USA
The tale of The Grateful Dead is inspiring, complicated and downright messy. A tribe of contrarians, they made art out of open-ended chaos and inadvertently achieved success on their own terms. Never-before-seen footage and interviews offer this unprecedented and unvarnished look at the life of the Dead. World Premiere

FROM THE COLLECTION:

DESERT HEARTS
Director: Donna Deitch, Screenwriter: Natalie Cooper / USA
Nevada, 1959: Vivian Bell arrives to get a divorce and finds herself increasingly drawn to Cay Rivvers, a self-assured lesbian. The emotions released by their developing intimacy combined with Vivian’s insecurities are played out against a backdrop of rocky landscapes and country and western songs. The Festival will screen a new digitally restored version by the Criterion Collection and UCLA Film & Television Archive in conjunction with Sundance Institute and Outfest UCLA Legacy Project.

RESERVOIR DOGS
Director and screenwriter: Quentin Tarantino / USA
They were perfect strangers, assembled to pull off the perfect crime. Then their simple robbery explodes into a bloody ambush and the ruthless killers realize one of them is a police informant. But which one? Miramax provided a brand-new 35mm print for this special 25th anniversary screening, which will be followed by an extended Q&A with Tarantino and producer Lawrence Bender.

These lineup additions join the Day One Documentary Premieres and New Climate title which was announced last Friday, an as-yet untitled follow-up to AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH, directed by Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk.

Earlier lineup announcements include the US and World Cinema Documentary and Dramatic Competitions, plus NEXT; New Frontier; Premieres, Documentary Premieres, Midnight, Spotlight, Kids, and Special Events; and Shorts.

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On DVD: LANDFILL HARMONIC

landfillNew to DVD this week: LANDFILL HARMONIC

Brad Allgood and Graham Townsley’s portrait of an impoverished children’s orchestra debuted at SXSW last year, where it picked up an audience award. It went on to screen at Sheffield, New Zealand, Vancouver, Cleveland, DocAviv, and AFI Fest, among several others.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: GHOSTLAND

ghostlandComing to theatres today, Wednesday, December 14: GHOSTLAND

Simon Stadler’s chronicle of Kalahari bushmen’s experience of the West debuted at Thessaloniki Doc earlier this year. Its festival circuit also included SXSW, Ambulante, Atlantic, Bergen, Flahertiana, Durban, Rio, and Vancouver, among other events.

For more than 25 years, the Ju/’hoansi Bushmen of Namibia have been barred from hunting the wildlife that has sustained them for millennia. In response they have had to adapt to a capitalist system and depend on the tourism industry, entertaining Europeans with staged dances and demonstrations, and selling them handmade crafts. Stadler, a German filmmaker, seeks to privilege the perspectives of the Ju/’hoansi in their interactions with these outsiders, representing them as knowing participants in an awkward but necessary exchange rather than the stereotyped “savages” that visitors likely assume they are observing. When the setting changes from Namibia to Frankfurt, however, owing to an invitation to four of the Bushmen to travel as part of a cultural exchange, the film struggles, opting instead for a less complex fish out of water approach. While Stadler transforms the Bushmen from the object of the gaze to the gazers themselves, these new tourists’ observations of Western culture are presented in consistently unsurprising and simplistic terms, noting that Germans and their city are too large, anonymous, and noisy. The result is a mildly amusing role reversal from the initial scenes of the film, but one handled with too broad a stroke to be particularly complex or revealing.

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On DVD: THE HOLLYWOOD SHORTIES

hollywoodshortiesComing to DVD today, Tuesday, December 13: THE HOLLYWOOD SHORTIES

Ryan Steven Green’s history of a little person sports team had its premiere at SXSW earlier this year. The doc went on to screenat Sidewalk, Chagrin Doc, Carmel, BendFilm, Hell’s Half Mile, and San Francisco DocFest, among other events.

I previously wrote about the doc

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On DVD: FAKE IT SO REAL

fake-it-so-real-gabrielComing to DVD today, Tuesday, December 13: FAKE IT SO REAL

Robert Greene’s look at the lives of aspiring pro wrestlers debuted at True/False in 2011. Screenings followed at Sarasota, Camden, Rooftop Films, Maryland, and CPH:DOX.

I wrote about the doc out of True/False

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On DVD/VOD: HOOLIGAN SPARROW

hooliganComing to DVD and VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, December 13: HOOLIGAN SPARROW

Nanfu Wang’s look at the persecution faced by a Chinese activist had its world premiere at Sundance this year. Screenings followed at Nantucket, Hot Docs, Full Frame, Sheffield, Cleveland, Human Rights Watch, Dallas, One World, Thessaloniki Doc, Los Angeles Asian Pacific, Documenta Madrid, Encounters, and Traverse City, among other events. The doc has been shortlisted for the Academy Awards.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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Special Screening: WILDNESS

wildnessComing to NYC’s Queer/Art/Film series tonight, Monday, December 12: WILDNESS

Wu Tsang’s ode to a Los Angeles queer bar debuted at MoMA’s Documentary Fortnight in 2012. It went on to screen at SXSW, Frameline, Outfest, Queerlisboa, Glasgow, and several other queer fests.

I previously wrote about the film here.

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On TV: CATHOLICS VS CONVICTS

catholicsComing to ESPN as part of its 30 for 30 series tomorrow, Saturday, December 10: CATHOLICS VS CONVICTS

Patrick Creadon’s look back at an infamous college football rivalry debuted at Chicago this Fall. It has also screened at Denver.

In 1988, the Notre Dame Fighting Irish and the University of Miami Hurricanes were both undefeated, led by coaches with a contentious history. The rivalry consumed both campuses, inspiring Pat Walsh, an entrepreneurial student with athletic dreams of his own, to risk official censure by expanding his illegal dorm-room t-shirt-making business with a new release: a shirt boldly emblazoned with the slogan “Catholics vs Convicts.” Pressing the dichotomy between the teams – the traditional, conservative Notre Dame against the upstart Miami, whose players had had some run-ins with the law – the shirt was an instant hit and added fuel to the fire in the countdown to the teams’ gridiron face-off. Creadon, who was a Notre Dame student at the time and Walsh’s roommate, weaves the story of the infamous t-shirt through this recounting of the legendary rivalry and memorable game. While the background on the shirt doesn’t quite have enough heft to carry the project to the extent it’s focused on here, it offers an unusual angle through which to appreciate the larger story.

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In Theatres: SOLITARY

solitary_image3Coming to theatres today, Friday, December 9: SOLITARY

Kristi Jacobson’s exploration of longterm solitary confinement made its debut at Tribeca this Spring. It went on to screen at IDFA, Denver, Philadelphia, Stockholm, Human Rights Watch, AFI Docs, Sheffield, and Traverse City, among other fests.

Jacobson’s film is set within Virginia’s Red Onion State Prison, one of more than 40 American supermax prisons where inmates are often kept in solitary confinement for up to 23 hours each day. Having broken general population prison rules through violence, escape attempts, or other disruptive behavior, the men profiled in this sobering project find their reality reduced to eight-by-ten cells for an indefinite period of time, only able to communicate with passing guards or occasionally via vents with neighboring inmates. Jacobson spends a year at Red Onion, and is able to speak with several of the incarcerated men – all of whom have committed serious, violent crimes, including murder – about their experiences in isolation. They speak of boredom, frustration, anger, and suicidal ideation, underscoring the impact of such punishment on their mental well-being. Without sugar-coating their dark pasts and criminal activity that led to their incarceration, Jacobson presents an eye-opening look at the excesses of a prison system that values punishment over rehabilitation.

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